Our Roots educational partners create innovative learning packages in cooperation with K-12 students and teachers. These educational modules provide Canadian youth with engaging ways to make history personally exciting and relevant by bringing local histories into the curriculum.
Computers are changing the way students think about history. Video, voice and music clips, virtual museums, interactive web sites and digitized primary text and photographic resources, such as those on Our Roots, are now at the fingertips of student and teacher alike. The study of history is moving out of textbooks and into the community. When those of us over 25 think about “Canadian history,” we recall some of the grand sweep of events we learned about in school. Today, students have ready access to a wide range of intriguing resources not only about those events, but also about the places they live, the people who lived there before them, and the stories that lie behind the familiar faces of their everyday lives. Today, even the youngest child has access to materials that, in the past, were available only to determined academics sifting through archives far from home.
This is exciting. Ordinary citizens and whole communities can find themselves and their roots in the papers, photos, statistics, film clips and recordings of the past. My story can become part of our story in ways that only free access to a wealth of information makes possible.
As you will see on this site, students make history while they study it! In diverse communities across Alberta, students are looking around them. What are the rusty nails and shards of pottery that their teacher found in her back garden all about? Who had left them there decades before, and why? In the wake of the Mad Cow crisis, why had another’s parents returned to raising heritage poultry and seeds? Could students create virtual museums of local places of importance to share with the world?
Every community has its stories: the old railroaders in fourth generation railway families who remember the early days of the CPR; native elders who know the stories of the plants in the fields near the school, and when to harvest them for medicine; the names of soldiers on the monument in the park that you walk past every day. Maybe it’s your school, itself. Are there papers and pictures that give you some insight into the moment in your community’s history when the school was built, or abandoned? How about the wartime housing on your street, or the boarded up mine? Who are the people in all those old photographs from our town that we found online? Can we collect and tell their stories, too?
In big ways and in small, students and their teachers are composing and sharing stories of their homes. They are learning how to work with primary sources, interviewing people whose voices will soon disappear, making judgments about what they are seeing and why these things are important. Students are becoming active members of the community, creating websites and CD’s for local historical societies, and developing materials by kids, for kids. On Our Roots, you can see how wonderful it is when the study of history moves beyond materials someone else thinks are interesting and important for kids, and puts the children’s questions right at the forefront. We think that makes for exciting history and lively citizenship. Galileo Educational Network
The Galileo Educational Network Association working in collaboration with Our Roots is an exciting nationwide project. This project involves students creating historical online resources designed for others. Using inquiry-based learning, this project uses Our Roots digital resources effectively and imaginatively to create engaging and authentic tasks for students. Student work is published online and teacher narratives explain and explore the thinking and processes that lie behind each inquiry.
We invite you to journey through the projects showcased on this website and to discover what students are learning about their past. These projects were created using Galileo's design process found at http://about.myio.org/. New projects are being added on an ongoing basis.
Galileo educational resources are supported by the generosity of Shaw Communications inc.
The Alberta Online Consortium (AOC) takes a leadership role to advocate on behalf of online educators. As well, AOC uses existing and new technologies to enhance and optimize student learning. The Alberta Online Consortium collaborates with the Learning Technologies Branch of Alberta Learning to cooperatively address the need for online content. Content development initiatives allow teachers to work collaboratively to build content that is shared and used in online learning situations.